2U LETTERS FROM EGYPT. I was curious to hear whether, on the strength of this, he would let out any further intoler- ance against the Copts; but he said far less, and far less bitterly, than I have heard certain Christians say of each other, and debitait the most usual commonplace, common-sense argu- ments on the subject. I fancy it would not be very palatable to many Unitarians to be claimed "mir nichts, dir nichts," as followers of El Islam. But if people really wish to con- vert, in the sense of improving, they must in- sist on what the two religions have in common- and not on the most striking points of diffe- rence. That door is open, and no other. March?. We have now settled into quite warm- weather ways; no more going out at midday. It is now broiling, and I have been watching eight tall blacks swimming and capering about, with their skins shining like otter's fur when wet. They belong to a Gellab, a slave-dealer's boat, I see. The beautiful thing is to see men and boys at work among the green com. In the sun their brown skins look like dark clouded amber,—semi-transparent, so fine are they*